Roffredo Caetani is not exactly a household name, but he was
certainly one of the most interesting Italian composers active
during the turn of the 20th century. Godson of Liszt and a pupil of
Sgambati, his aristocratic origins allowed him, from childhood, to
be in contact with some of the most eminent personalities of the
cultural world of that period, meaning that he was able to keep up
with the latest musical tendencies, adapting them to his own needs
and personal style.A preference for gloomy atmospheres, rigorous
use of polyphony and the relentless search for particularly daring
and dissonant harmonies are just some of the traits to be found in
Caetani?s oeuvre, many of which also appear in this compilation,
dedicated to the composer?s output for piano. While the Ballad Op.9
is perhaps the most inspired of Caetani?s works for the instrument,
containing bold chromaticisms and numerous Wagnerian touches, the
Four Impromptus are of a lighter and more intimate nature, most
likely conceived for performance in the refined environment of the
salon rather than in the concert hall. Also included on the set is
a Toccata, the final piece making up Op.9 and which refers back to
the Baroque repertory as well as to Schumann (to his Toccata Op.7),
and the Sonata Op.3 ? Caetani?s most ambitious piece for piano,
cyclic in nature and particularly affecting in its second movement,
a vast canvas of melancholy and reflection.This is the first
commercial recording dedicated to Roffredo Caetani?s piano music,
and many listeners may ask themselves why music of such quality and
expressive power is not better known. One of the reasons is surely
Caetani?s reserved character ? a composer by vocation ? and perhaps
the dispassionate complexity underlying the interpretation and
performance of his music also plays a role. Produced by the
Fondazione Roffredo Caetani, this CD aims to do justice to a
composer who is without doubt one of the most important
representatives of Italian instrumental music at the end of the
19th century.Other information:- Recorded 20?22 September 2013, Tau
Recording Studio, Sicily.- Italian composer Roffredo Caetani
(1871-1961), of aristocratic descent, was the godson of Franz Liszt
and pupil of Sgambati (himself pupil of Liszt). A pianist himself
he mainly composed for the piano, in late romantic style, full of
brooding chromatism and sometimes complex polyphony, inspired by
the great Busoni.- This CD presents World Premiere recordings of
his dramatic Ballade, the four Impromptus in lighter tone and mood,
and the magnificent Sonata, with its 43 minutes the most monumental
piano Italian piano sonata of the 19th century.- A most welcome
release of piano works of exceptional quality and scope, played
with great insight and mastery by Alessandra Ammara, one of Italy?s
foremost pianists (recently receiving a glowing 5 star review in
French magazine Diapason for her Ravel recording).- Excellent liner
notes written by a musicologist and artist biography in Italian and
English.- Booklet also contains information about the Fondazione
Roffredo Caetani.

Roffredo Caetani is not exactly a household name, but he was
certainly one of the most interesting Italian composers active
during the turn of the 20th century. Godson of Liszt and a pupil of
Sgambati, his aristocratic origins allowed him, from childhood, to
be in contact with some of the most eminent personalities of the
cultural world of that period, meaning that he was able to keep up
with the latest musical tendencies, adapting them to his own needs
and personal style.A preference for gloomy atmospheres, rigorous
use of polyphony and the relentless search for particularly daring
and dissonant harmonies are just some of the traits to be found in
Caetani’s oeuvre, many of which also appear in this compilation,
dedicated to the composer’s output for piano. While the Ballad Op.9
is perhaps the most inspired of Caetani’s works for the instrument,
containing bold chromaticisms and numerous Wagnerian touches, the
Four Impromptus are of a lighter and more intimate nature, most
likely conceived for performance in the refined environment of the
salon rather than in the concert hall. Also included on the set is
a Toccata, the final piece making up Op.9 and which refers back to
the Baroque repertory as well as to Schumann (to his Toccata Op.7),
and the Sonata Op.3 – Caetani’s most ambitious piece for piano,
cyclic in nature and particularly affecting in its second movement,
a vast canvas of melancholy and reflection.This is the first
commercial recording dedicated to Roffredo Caetani’s piano music,
and many listeners may ask themselves why music of such quality and
expressive power is not better known. One of the reasons is surely
Caetani’s reserved character – a composer by vocation – and perhaps
the dispassionate complexity underlying the interpretation and
performance of his music also plays a role. Produced by the
Fondazione Roffredo Caetani, this CD aims to do justice to a
composer who is without doubt one of the most important
representatives of Italian instrumental music at the end of the
19th century.Other information:- Recorded 20–22 September 2013, Tau
Recording Studio, Sicily.- Italian composer Roffredo Caetani
(1871-1961), of aristocratic descent, was the godson of Franz Liszt
and pupil of Sgambati (himself pupil of Liszt). A pianist himself
he mainly composed for the piano, in late romantic style, full of
brooding chromatism and sometimes complex polyphony, inspired by
the great Busoni.- This CD presents World Premiere recordings of
his dramatic Ballade, the four Impromptus in lighter tone and mood,
and the magnificent Sonata, with its 43 minutes the most monumental
piano Italian piano sonata of the 19th century.- A most welcome
release of piano works of exceptional quality and scope, played
with great insight and mastery by Alessandra Ammara, one of Italy’s
foremost pianists (recently receiving a glowing 5 star review in
French magazine Diapason for her Ravel recording).- Excellent liner
notes written by a musicologist and artist biography in Italian and
English.- Booklet also contains information about the Fondazione
Roffredo Caetani....